Final thanks for a job well done
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Back in August of 2000, we wrote an editorial lamenting the lack
of good people running for public office, titled “Where have all the
candidates gone?”
Since then, several matters have rocked the political landscape
and made campaigning a tougher game than ever.
We’ve most likely played a part in that game, as some have
bemoaned our sometimes hard-hitting coverage and bold, front-page
headlines.
But we are just the tip of the iceberg.
Candidates today have to face the reality of phony phone calls,
exorbitant campaign fund-raising for nonpaying offices, trumped up
charges of malfeasance and conspiracies and name calling by members
of the public and even their own board colleagues.
So with that in mind, we’d like to tip our hat in gratitude to the
brave batch of outgoing school board and city council members who
withstood the heat, didn’t get out of the kitchen (until their terms
were up) and left legacies that will be long lasting.
On the Costa Mesa City Council, we must say a word of thanks to
Linda Dixon, who lost her bid for reelection in November. Dixon
served as a councilwoman during a period that for at least the last
two years saw nary a meeting that went by without rantings of rancor
and discord.
To be sure, Dixon’s accomplishments and contributions to this
city, reported and unreported, will be appreciated by residents for a
long time to come.
On the Newport Beach City Council, longtime council members Dennis
O’Neil and Norma Glover were forced out of their seats by term
limits.
In their eight years, they saw the council torn asunder by several
issues, most notably the ouster of then City Manager Kevin Murphy and
the ascendancy and domination of the Greenlight movement, a movement
that targeted the council as ineffective and unresponsive to the
needs of the community.
Glover and O’Neil, who were on opposite sides of the Murphy firing
fiasco, were certainly not the darlings of that Greenlight crowd, but
managed to get their voices heard by sticking to their message.
But what residents will ultimately be the most grateful to O’Neil
and Glover for is their role as the main powerbrokers to an agreement
by leaders of Stop Polluting Our Newport, the Airport Working Group,
the county board of supervisors and the city to ink a new Settlement
Agreement at John Wayne that will extend flight caps and curfews for
years to come.
Finally, to the Newport-Mesa Unified School Board. There probably
couldn’t be two members more diametrically opposed than Wendy Leece
and Jim Ferryman. Both will not be on the board in the coming years,
Ferryman by his own choice, Leece by virtue of the ballot box.
Leece probably won’t be missed much by her board colleagues, who
often disagreed with her outspoken and conservative points of view.
Ferryman, on the other hand, was a valued member of the school
board team, so to speak, who enjoyed the loyalty of his colleagues,
even through his darkest hour, while facing a DUI arrest and
subsequent conviction.
Either way, both have played important roles in the shaping of
policies such as zero tolerance and smaller class sizes, the opening
and reopening of new schools, of helping the board recover from
financial losses linked to the county bankruptcy and the crowing of
all achievements, the overwhelming public support for a bond measure
that promises to repair the crumbling infrastructure and make a
better environment for all the teens and children in this district.
To all of those who have served, we extend our thanks on behalf of
the community and this paper.
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